Ladas wrote:
So what we need a tuition czar for universities to keep the costs of medical education down so the future doctors can afford their new jobs working for clinics.
Like Germany, essentially?
Monte wrote:
I also see health care as a right, and believe the government has an obligation to provide free, high quality health care to all Americans.
TNSTAAFL.
Monte wrote:
It has nothing to do with doctors, who presumably went into medicine in order to provide high quality health care to people.
I would largely disagree with this assumption.
Monty wrote:
Yes, a nationalized system would mean that doctors would have to adjust. However, we have public and private schools working side by side in this country. I see no reason we couldn't have a similar situation in regards to health care. The goal is free (or nearly free) high quality health care for all Americans. Because I feel it's a right.
Are you saying you think a two-tier system such as perhaps NZ would be what you'd like?
Monty wrote:
However, if we went to a nationalized system, and a Doctor had a serious objection to that, he could certainly do something else for a living. Perhaps plastic surgery, or teach?
Why do you list plastic surgery here? Do you believe plastic surgeons (which any physician can practice, btw) do not provide care to patients?
Monty wrote:
Maybe we would see more doctors get into the business motivated not by the potential of great wealth, but the potential to do great things and provide great care to patients. Plenty of doctors get into medicine for that reason, anyway.
Many doctors do go into medicine for that reason. They are not, IMO, the majority. Therefore, it is extremely unlikely that a removal of the profit motive would result in an increased supply of physicians. I think you need to more closely examine the privatization of certain elements of care in the UK to see what happens when the profit motive is reintroduced, in order to retrospectively predict what would happen if that same profit motive were removed.